Thursday, March 23, 2017

I’d loved running since I started doing it in 2010, but
after my December 2016 marathon, which was miserable,
I was blistered, beaten down, and burned out. Now I’m in this weird running
purgatory. As of this writing, I’ve run seven times in 2017 and maybe one or
two times more than that since the marathon, and most of all that was walking
intervals.

I knew it would take several weeks to heal from the physical
pounding of such an event, but I hadn’t imagined how long it might take to heal
mentally and emotionally. Knowing that it’s not uncommon for a runner to find herself
in a bit of a funk and needing a short break or recovery season doesn’t make it
easier to deal with.

But instead of worrying over it, I’ve spent the down time
lifting weights, developing a personal yoga practice, walking more, fighting zombies,
and hatching Pokémon. The Pokémon Go and Zombies, Run! apps got me through the
most mind-numbing miles or marathon training, and I have faith that they will help
me find the drive to run many more.

Competition is a great motivator, and sure, you can invite
friends or coworkers to challenges like logging the most steps per day on
FitBit, but that doesn’t interest me these days. I need more creative and
interactive fitness-driven games.

So I find myself absorbed in collecting a virtual zoo. In
addition to spawning wild monsters, the PoGo app spontaneously distributes eggs
to hatch into Pokémon, achieved by walking or slowly running 2K, 5K, or 10K,
depending on the egg, up to nine eggs at a time.

Zombies, Run! is an interactive, narrative audio game about
YOU saving the world from zombies, mad scientists, lions, and rogues all while
collecting supplies to expand, upgrade, and protect your virtual home base. The
writing is absolutely brilliant, and the cast of characters is delightfully
diverse, including many women and queers, with those identities being merely
incidental not integral to the plot itself. Each time, I can barely wait for my
next mission; the engaging story always has me wishing I could run more miles
or minutes to find out what happens next.

Combining North Texas’ bizarrely beautiful spring weather of
late, that Team Valor “gotta hatch ‘em all!” attitude, and the encroaching
apocalypse, I’ll find the joy of running again soon enough.

Friday, March 17, 2017

I got started running when I joined a women’s walking club in early 2010. One ultra marathoner in the group tried to talk us into signing up for a 10k that summer. We peer-pressured one another into all registering and started running to prepare for that race. And we all did it.

I’ve been hooked (off and on) ever since.

Edited on March 22 to add: A much later confirmation e-mail indicated ambassadors are expected to re-share Run4Life posts twice a week, submit a blog post monthly, and participate in a running event monthly (and would receive a t-shirt and maybe some other miscellaneous branded gear). Which seems excessive. And is expensive.

For comparison:

The year-long ENELL ambassador program provided two sports bras, a tech t-shirt, a long-sleeve tech shirt, and a cool tote; paid for three race registrations; and required that I write about those three events and tag/reshare ENELL on social media, though no set number.

Moosejaw sent a tech t-shirt, bumper sticker, flag, can koozie, and discount codes in exchange for posting photos of myself wearing the shirt and holding the flag at races and tagging them, no set number.

BondiBand requested a 3-month commitment, social media tags, and monthly blog or video posts and sent a pair of compression socks to review (which weren't great) and paid a commission on all sales made via my personal discount code.

Since Run4Life's ambassador program was new, I asked in the ambassadors Facebook group what inspired the requirements for ambassadors and received a response about someone's illness inspiring the founders to share/promote their love of running. I said, "Thanks, I find it interesting that the social media and racing requirements are more than the other three brand ambassadorships I've completed ... combined." And I was deleted from the group without a word for two days until I reached out to ask about it.

Chat transcript:

Me (Moniqa): Hi, Jeff. I don't know if Facebook is being glitch or what, but I'm having trouble finding the ambassadors' group. Do you have a link for it? Thanks.

Jeff: Moniqe, We decided that our group was not a fit with you.

Me: And is there a reason you chose not to discuss that with me or even inform me of this decision?

Jeff: I just informed you.

Me: Yes, after I sought you out. That is very unprofessional behavior. Please remove my content from the Run4Life site/blog.

Though I'm irritated with this behavior, I'm ultimately glad to have dodged the bullet of providing so much free labor and content for a brand that definitely doesn't offer the "encouragement," "guidance," and "community" it claims on its banner.

Thursday, March 16, 2017

I'm sharing the wording from my recent letter-writing efforts to state and national legislators/politicians for those who want ideas on where to begin. Do feel free to borrow my ideas and wording and get shit done.____________________________________________________________

Dear Gov. Abbott,

As a native Texas, I oppose SB6. Transgender people pose NO
threat. Trans kids need our protection, not discrimination.

It is egregious to
use me and other cisgender women like me as an excuse to discriminate against
other Texans. We don't need potty police protection, and this bill would have
the exact opposite of its intended effect: NC has seen an INCREASE in assaults
against women by citizen vigilantes who think the HB2 bathroom law gives them
license to attack any woman who doesn't look "feminine" enough for
them.

Monday, March 13, 2017

Monday, March 6 was Transgender Advocacy Day, and the ACLU
provided buses from Dallas, San Antonio, and Houston to those interested in
going to the capitol to speak to their legislators. Tuesday, March 7 was
Abortion Funds Advocacy Day, and the Texas Equal Access fund provided transportation
from Dallas. This meant I was blessed with the opportunity to ride to Austin,
receive info, training, support, and lunch from the ACLU and to meet up with
TEA Fund Tuesday to do the same and catch a ride home.

The final cherry on top was a ride to my car Tuesday evening
from another advocate who said it was on her way home instead of my having to
call for a Lyft.

Monday evening, Danielle Pellet brought me along to a
cookout for some of the advocates that day, and I got to meet so many amazing
people, including New Hope Mayor Jess Herbst. Dani also gave me a ride to my
friend’s place to crash that night.

I went to boot camp before dawn with my host, and she was
kind enough to offer me a ride to the capitol so I could save the cab fee. With
her work schedule, though, that put me 2 hours early for meeting up with the
abortion party.

This gave me some time to roam the capitol and catch
Pokémon. I had the pleasure of running across Johnny Boucher in the halls to
chat a bit and offer a hug and encouragement. His family drove down from Dallas
that morning to testify against SB6, Texas’s own “bathroom bill.” They signed
up and waited over 18 hours before leaving near midnight. A friend said their
names were finally called at 2 or 3 a.m. Wednesday.

Tuesday was also Space Day Texas, celebrating space
exploration. I asked one person at a booth what the event was about and whether
I could have one of those spiffy astronaut-shaped stress squeezy things on the
table. When he said “Yes, of course,” I told him that silly thing really made
my day. He alluded to the stress of the day to come (what with over 400 people
spilling into the halls as they waited to testify on SB6).

I remarked that I teared up when I saw so many people here
for that, and he responded, “And that is exactly how it should be.” I knew he
couldn’t say anything explicit about the issue since he was on the clock
representing his company, but we shared smiles and well wishes for the day. Then I nearly cried again at the beauty of such a serendipitous encounter with
a stranger.

Wednesday, March 8, 2017

I'm sharing the wording from my recent letter-writing efforts to my state and national representatives for those who want ideas on where to begin. Do feel free to borrow my ideas and wording and get shit done.

I spent the last two days in Austin advocating for trans rights and abortion access, to varying effect. I may write more about it later (and I did), but for now, here are the thank-you notes I'm mailing today:

Dear Representative Neave,

I want to express my sincere gratitude for inviting Danielle
Pellett, Pamela Curry, and me to your office on Monday, March 6 to take a brief
rest from our day of lobbying against the SB6 bathroom bill. We’d come down
from Dallas that morning, and despite feeling buoyed by the ACLU’s energetic morning
press conference on the Capitol steps, our following efforts speaking with our
representatives’ staff were met with polite disinterest.

Your staff gave us a warm welcome and offered us all fresh
fruit just as we found ourselves hitting an afternoon slump: both emotionally
drained and physically fatigued by the humid weather and trekking all over the
building, more in need of the snack than we realized.

Thank you for your kindness and all the work that you do in
the Texas House.

Thank you so much for meeting with a pair of us from the
Texas Abortion Funds on Tuesday, March 7. We were visiting from Dallas to
garner support for an agenda of expanding abortion access to people most in
need, especially people of color, minors, low-income families, and people in
prison.

Our own representatives did not return our requests for a
meeting, so it was especially impactful for us to get to speak with a friendly Representatives’
Chief of Staff and share personal stories of suffering under Texas’s
restrictions.

Since it can be such a contentious topic, our organizations
have so far been unable to find support for legislation and are taking a
different tack with seeking support for the Abortion Funds Agenda in order to
show legislators there is wider agreement of shared values than they may think.
Whatever one’s individual thoughts on abortion, most will agree that women and
other pregnant people deserve factual medical information and access to safe
health care.

Thank you again for your time and the work that you and Rep.
Hernandez do.

Wednesday, March 1, 2017

For
posterity, I'm going to make a blog post for each year listing all the
races I've completed. I meant to post this at the end of last year but forgot until now. It's still interesting to see the variations in my running/racing interest and motivation from year to year.